Hamlet's Decisions In Hamlet By William Shakespeare

572 Words3 Pages
When it comes to decisions are you quick to act or do you tend to think things through? If you tend to think things through, no worries you are not alone as Hamlet the lone, troubled, and somewhat hesitant character goes through a series of thoughts before reaching his own conclusions. The fiction Hamlet compares his own situation to is the reason why he has this certain “method to his madness” and that this specific soliloquy pans out his next move towards how he’ll extract vengeance for his dead father’s spirit. Hamlet dismayed by the first player’s action says, “Tears in his eyes, distraction in’s aspect, a broken voice, and his whole function suiting with forms to his conceit? And all for nothing!” As he connects the first player’s reaction

More about Hamlet's Decisions In Hamlet By William Shakespeare